Vlad,
As interesting in parts as all this is the argument for simulated universe/s has long been articulated as part of theology and belief in God or gods.
Leaving aside for now your category error of conflating “articulated” with “speculated”, you’ve just run up again against your necessary/sufficient problem: whether or not “a creator” has long been part of theism does not by any stretch make it
identical to theism, which was your claim.
The Oxford History of Christianity identifies two possible starting points in any exploration of Christianity. One is identical to that of SU conjecture ( The creator approach) and the other is the salvation approach.
It might be a “starting point”, but it sure as anything isn’t the finishing point too – which is why your “identical” claim fails so abjectly.
To argue that the former is not part or even an insignificant claim in Christianity or theism or deism or polytheism is plain wrong.
Which is why no-one has done that.
I think we can take it that a feature of your argument is now that this is a reasonable argument but because religion is unreasonable this cannot be a religious argument. Can you spot the problems with that assumption?
Yes – that it’s not my assumption at all; it’s just yet another of your straw men.
Your alternative is specially pleading that it is a lousy argument that becomes reasonable in the hands of a scientist.
No it isn’t. Stop lying.
First, it’s not an argument at all whether reasonable or otherwise; it’s just a
conjecture. Lying about that isn’t helping you.
Second, it still fails to satisfy almost all the conditions that would be necessary for the SU conjecture to be “identical” to theism as you so wrongly claimed.
You can never though effectively or logically make this a non theological argument other than arbitrarily and by an act that would be the ''Irish success in the Eurovision Song Contest'' of historical revisionism.
As it’s not my argument at all, I’ll leave you to your private grief about this.
Given that, the idea is I feel so philosophically 'productive' the implications should be debated whether you are able to accept is as part of theology or not.
It’s not productive at all, either as science or as theology. It’s not productive as science because (currently at least) there’s no way to investigate the conjecture such that it could be anything other than a conjecture.
And its not productive as theology because the SU conjecture lacks almost all the sufficient characteristics of theology. Perhaps if you finally grasp the difference between “necessary” and “sufficient” you’d understand why and, as an added bonus, stop making a fool of yourself here.